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  • In this collaboration with David Elliot, Patrick Tierney, and Tiffany Pan, we proposed a do-it-yourself, decentralized bulletin board system that uses FM radio for transmitting messages received by phone. In addition, each transmitter node in the
  • Two Women -
    "Two Women" consisted of one computer station, two light boxes (58.4 x 60.3 x 20.3 cm), and two boxes (95.25 x 71.1 x 30.5 cm) each with three images revolving in response either to a timing device located in the computer or to user key-press at the
  • D-G Cabine -
    An interactive video game imprisons or ejects players or their avatars in a cabin conceived in collaboration with the designer Vincent Torjman. This piece, the high point of the exhibition “Instrument Flying Rules” lays down the physical limitations
  • Der Schrei
    A yellow, two-meter-high siren slowly rotates around its own axis and produces a constant, penetrating, cyclical stream of sound that is modulated by the turning of the horn. Its powerful acoustic waves cause objects in the exhibition space to
  • In a public exhibition space (Art Basel Unlimited), von Bismarck spent a week on a paraboloid-shaped cement disc, which rotated around its own axis at a speed of fifteen revolutions per minute. He slept, ate, read, and talked on the telephone while
  • High resolution visualizations created with custom software using 2.3 million Instagram photos from 13 global cities. Source: Lev Manovich
  • High resolution visualizations of 1 million manga pages created with custom software. Source: Lev Manovich
  • TimeLine
    High resolution visualization of all 4535 covers of Time magazine (1923-2009) created with custom software. Source: Lev Manovich
  • Three inflatable pavilions, Information Pavilion, Video Studio and Auditorium, were commissioned and developed specially for the international outdoor art exhibition Sonsbeek Buiten de Perken. The Video Studio was a PVC tensile skin stretched over
  • ZKM Aussenkenung are a group of five outdoor LED displays that together constitute the signage for the ZKM Centre for Art and Media in Karlsruhe. The contents of these displays are all freely programmable. 1 and 2. A tall column stands on the main